10 things to know Wednesday

2. MORE BODIES RECOVERED FROM WASHINGTON MUDSLIDE: Rescuers searching for survivors after a massive landslide recover two more bodies for a total of 16 and believe they have located another eight.

By The Associated Press

Published: Wednesday, March 26, 2014 at 09:52 AM.

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. 'THE MOST CREDIBLE LEAD THAT WE HAVE': A top Malaysian official says a satellite scanning the Indian Ocean for remnants of a missing jetliner found a possible plane debris field containing 122 objects.

2. MORE BODIES RECOVERED FROM WASHINGTON MUDSLIDE: Rescuers searching for survivors after a massive landslide recover two more bodies for a total of 16 and believe they have located another eight.

3. PANEL CONSIDERED PHONE COMPANY OPTION: AP's Eileen Sullivan reports that the Senate Intelligence Committee three years ago considered — but rejected — alternate ways for the NSA to collect and store Americans' phone records.

4. HEALTH CARE ENROLLMENT EXTENDED AFTER GLITCHES: The Obama administration is granting more time for people to apply if they started the process but were unable to complete it before the March 31 deadline.

5. WHAT OBAMA'S CONCEDING ABOUT UKRAINE FOR FIRST TIME: The president acknowledges that Russia is unlikely to surrender control of Crimea — while insisting that the international community will never recognize the takeover.

6. WHO'S BEING BENCHED ON OBAMA TRIP: The Secret Service sends three agents home from the Netherlands just before the president's arrival after one agent was found intoxicated in an Amsterdam hotel.

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:

1. 'THE MOST CREDIBLE LEAD THAT WE HAVE': A top Malaysian official says a satellite scanning the Indian Ocean for remnants of a missing jetliner found a possible plane debris field containing 122 objects.

2. MORE BODIES RECOVERED FROM WASHINGTON MUDSLIDE: Rescuers searching for survivors after a massive landslide recover two more bodies for a total of 16 and believe they have located another eight.

3. PANEL CONSIDERED PHONE COMPANY OPTION: AP's Eileen Sullivan reports that the Senate Intelligence Committee three years ago considered — but rejected — alternate ways for the NSA to collect and store Americans' phone records.

4. HEALTH CARE ENROLLMENT EXTENDED AFTER GLITCHES: The Obama administration is granting more time for people to apply if they started the process but were unable to complete it before the March 31 deadline.

5. WHAT OBAMA'S CONCEDING ABOUT UKRAINE FOR FIRST TIME: The president acknowledges that Russia is unlikely to surrender control of Crimea — while insisting that the international community will never recognize the takeover.

6. WHO'S BEING BENCHED ON OBAMA TRIP: The Secret Service sends three agents home from the Netherlands just before the president's arrival after one agent was found intoxicated in an Amsterdam hotel.

7. WHO IS GOING HI-TECH IN TACKLING DROUGHT: NASA is taking snow surveys off the ground, saying it can measure snowpack and water content from planes flying over California's and Colorado's mountains.